Hurricane
Well-Known Member
As most will know on here, I run the technical side of the marina forum at Sant Carles Marina ( www.scmchat.com )
The forum is run by berth holders for berth holders - no MDL influence.
That said, the marina manager at Sant Carles is always helpful and supportive.
So, when I approached him saying that we need better internet coverage for AIS in the Sant Carles area, he was understanding and prepared to help where necessary.
A background for those who don't know how all this stuff works.
If properly equipped, AIS signals are transmitted by vessels using VHF frequencies.
This limits the range to about 20 to 50 miles depending on conditions and installation etc.
Great for close quarter navigation to avoid collisions etc.
Vessels close to each other can share information - their position and course etc thus reducing the chance of collisions etc.
VHF is close range so, over the years, base stations have sprung up around the world that receive all these local AIS signals and feed them onto the internet where websites like Marine Traffic and Vesselfinder make the data available to everyone on the internet where ever you are. Satellites also receive AIS and feed onto the internet in a similar way. This works well for commercial craft that are allowed to transmit a more powerful signal and more frequently than leisure boats (excluding the latest Class B+). Consequently, you find areas of poor internet coverage, particularly for leisure boats.
Sant Carles is no exception.
We have a large fishing fleet alongside the marina but poor AIS coverage on www.marinetraffic and www.vesselfinder.com
So, I suggested to our marina manager that if, he provided the power, antenna and internet connection, I would build the necessary equipment to relay local AIS signals onto the internet.
There is an extra benefit that we would get - I have included consenting Sant Carles berth holders into a fleet within Vesselfinder. The SCMCHAT software then uses Vesselfinder to display "our fleet" of boats on an interactive map - I have even included the Brittany Ferries we all use into our fleet. Berth holders simply log into SCMCHAT to see where everyone is. That is fine but we needed to have a more accurate AIS input into the internet and by inputting AIS, Vesselfinder would upgrade our account to their professional version - a win win.
See this link to the SCMCHAT page - the Sant Carles Marina AIS Fleet
Here you can easily see where all our boats are (including the ferries) - without all the other vessels in the world.
http://www.scmchat.com/marina/scmais.html
Our marina manager was very supportive of the idea and immediately authorised his contractor to prepare the site for the equipment that I was going to build.
I WAS NOW TOTALLY COMMITTED TO PROVIDING AN ELECTRONIC SOLUTION AND NO IDEA WHAT TO USE.
We run SCMCHAT in a tight budget so I needed to keep the costs to a minimum.
I looked at buying a cheap AIS receiver but that would need some form of computer to connect it all to the internet.
I would need something that would collect the AIS data, filter out duplications and then push the results onto the internet.
You can buy dedicated equipment but that would be expensive so I got my box of Raspberry Pi parts out and started experimenting!!
Continued on next post.
The forum is run by berth holders for berth holders - no MDL influence.
That said, the marina manager at Sant Carles is always helpful and supportive.
So, when I approached him saying that we need better internet coverage for AIS in the Sant Carles area, he was understanding and prepared to help where necessary.
A background for those who don't know how all this stuff works.
If properly equipped, AIS signals are transmitted by vessels using VHF frequencies.
This limits the range to about 20 to 50 miles depending on conditions and installation etc.
Great for close quarter navigation to avoid collisions etc.
Vessels close to each other can share information - their position and course etc thus reducing the chance of collisions etc.
VHF is close range so, over the years, base stations have sprung up around the world that receive all these local AIS signals and feed them onto the internet where websites like Marine Traffic and Vesselfinder make the data available to everyone on the internet where ever you are. Satellites also receive AIS and feed onto the internet in a similar way. This works well for commercial craft that are allowed to transmit a more powerful signal and more frequently than leisure boats (excluding the latest Class B+). Consequently, you find areas of poor internet coverage, particularly for leisure boats.
Sant Carles is no exception.
We have a large fishing fleet alongside the marina but poor AIS coverage on www.marinetraffic and www.vesselfinder.com
So, I suggested to our marina manager that if, he provided the power, antenna and internet connection, I would build the necessary equipment to relay local AIS signals onto the internet.
There is an extra benefit that we would get - I have included consenting Sant Carles berth holders into a fleet within Vesselfinder. The SCMCHAT software then uses Vesselfinder to display "our fleet" of boats on an interactive map - I have even included the Brittany Ferries we all use into our fleet. Berth holders simply log into SCMCHAT to see where everyone is. That is fine but we needed to have a more accurate AIS input into the internet and by inputting AIS, Vesselfinder would upgrade our account to their professional version - a win win.
See this link to the SCMCHAT page - the Sant Carles Marina AIS Fleet
Here you can easily see where all our boats are (including the ferries) - without all the other vessels in the world.
http://www.scmchat.com/marina/scmais.html
Our marina manager was very supportive of the idea and immediately authorised his contractor to prepare the site for the equipment that I was going to build.
I WAS NOW TOTALLY COMMITTED TO PROVIDING AN ELECTRONIC SOLUTION AND NO IDEA WHAT TO USE.
We run SCMCHAT in a tight budget so I needed to keep the costs to a minimum.
I looked at buying a cheap AIS receiver but that would need some form of computer to connect it all to the internet.
I would need something that would collect the AIS data, filter out duplications and then push the results onto the internet.
You can buy dedicated equipment but that would be expensive so I got my box of Raspberry Pi parts out and started experimenting!!
Continued on next post.